The stories and pictures presented here are mostly of my family members, all long dead. A few non-family people with interesting stories are also featured. All could easily be forgotten but I don't want that to happen. Here you'll see the good and the bad, the serious and the funny.
Genealogical data and sources can be found on Rootsweb.com in the old WorldConnect, now Family Tree, section. For more information contact me at Snibbod1@aol.com.

Tuesday, May 31, 2016

In Istanbul there was a cemetery with a tombstone for Paul D. Peltier. However, I learned there some months after he was buried, his body was sent back to his mother in New York for final burial there.

What I learned about him while I was researching in 1992 those Americans who were buried in the Ferikoy-Istanbul Cemetery and had tombstones there. Paul's name was on one of them.

Here's what I learned from a book "Story of the Near East Relief (1915-1936) New York, Macmillan, 1936, page 136. Author James Levi Barton."

Paul, of New York, a pioneer Near East Relief worker, died on 1 Apr 1919 at Eskisehir, Turkey, following a railroad accident while he was on his way from Constantinople to the interior. Mr. Peltier was among the first group of relief workers commissioned after the armistice.

From the College Park Branch of the National Archives I learned the following: His mother was Mrs. Frederic Desnoyers Peltier, 144 E. 36th St. New York City. In a letter of 27 October 1919, she wrote to the Consulate: "Can Paul's body be shipped to us soon?" Consulate later replies the body is ready to ship on Black Arrow about 27 Nov. 1919. This was found on Form 192 - Report of Death of American Citizen, original copy in State Dept. RG59, Decimal File 367.113 (1910-1929).

In 1975, the Consul General in Istanbul asked the Secretary for the American Board of Missions if he could prepare a list of Americans buried the Ferikoy-Istanbul Protestant Cemetery. The Secretary, Melvin Wittler, created an up-to-date list and noted beside Paul's entry that he may have been interred in the cemetery originally and then later the body was removed for shipment to the United States.

The above information has been in my book "A Fine Place of Rest: Americans in the Protestant Cemetery, Ferikoy-Istanbul, Turkey" 1992.

Through the years that I was researching (all before the internet was available) I wondered what these people looked like, as well as what tidbit of information I hadn't found that would make them more "real" to me.

Tonight I ran Paul's name though Google Search and discovered this:young man had graduated from Columbia University, Class of 1918. Here's what else I found on that website:

Lt. Paul D. Peltier, U.S. Army, died in Eskishehir, Turkey, on April 1, 1919, as the result of an accident. He was sent to Turkey as a bacteriologist for the American Committee for Relief in the Near East.
Yes, he belongs to the group of Immortal Nobodies, don't you agree?

Friday, May 13, 2016

We all know the famous Muhammed Ali, formerly known as
Cassius Marcellus Clay. Not everybody
knows that he was a junior, named after his father, Cassius Marcellus Clay. But I'd wager that very few of us knew that there
was a Cassius Marcellus Clay even farther back in time…a fellow born on October
19, 1810 in Kentucky, who became a major figure in the abolitionist movement
during the Civil War and was not in any way related to the man we know.

This early Cassius was the son of General Green Clay and
Sallie Lewis Clay. According to Wikipedia,
General Clay was an early explorer of the American wilderness and an acquaintance
of Daniel Boone. He lived in Kentucky
and was a wealthy man who owned many slaves.

Cassius was highly educated, and at Yale in 1832 he heard
William Lloyd Garrison speak against slavery.
This influenced him to take a stand that was at odds with his father's
beliefs and practices. However, he was
more attuned to being an emancipationist, which meant that he favored the
gradual ending of slavery through legal means sanctioned by the Constitution,
rather than the more direct abolitionist actions.

He was elected to the Kentucky state legislature twice in
the 1830s, in spite of his stand against slavery. In 1844, he freed all his own slaves. From that point on he was active in the
anti-slavery movement and supported Abraham Lincoln's candidacy for
President. Later on, he was appointed an
Ambassador to Russia, a post he held twice.

According to various sources, he had some
"foibles" in his life that were quite unusual; one writer described
him as having a great deal of conceit and very little sense. "Ridiculous" was also applied to
some of his actions.

Be that as it may, the man did accomplish much in his life
to be proud of, and certainly the good overshadowed the bad.

Undoubtedly his role in abolitionist movement is what
encouraged the parents of Cassius Marcellus Clay (Senior) to name their child
as they did. And of course that name was
carried down another generation and given to the man we all know now as the
famous "Muhammed Ali."

I have been unable to find any earlier Cassius Marcellus in
history. Seems to me there might be
another Immortal Nobody hanging around.

I found this story, sketchy as it is, so very interesting. I was simply reading the book
"Washington, A History of Our National City" by Tom Lewis and came
upon a short bit about the Legislator Cassius Marcellus Clay. A little snooping told me a lot, and from
that point I knew he would be one of my Immortal Nobodies. And all of you who love American History, let
me tell you that Tom Lewis has written ONE GOOD BOOK.